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Waltzing More Than Matilda

~ Names with an Australian Bias of Democratic Temper

Waltzing More Than Matilda

Yearly Archives: 2012

Pollyanna and Banjo: Birth Announcements from Hobart (May)

15 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Archie Jack and Flynn Monty

Indianah Tika and Jaidah Anahera

Spencer Simon and Milla Sarah

 

Girls

Arya Isabel

Charlotte Elizabeth

Ivy Florence (Eliza, Izaak, Alex)

Letaya-Kirra Rose (Bailey, Jackson)

Millie Belle

Olive May (Alice)

Pollyanna Rose (Louie)

Poppy Cecelia

Quinn Georgia (Halle, Archer)

Sonya Rosalie (Ben, Amanda)

 

Boys

Atticus Sebastian (Stella, Scarlett, Archie, Avalon)

Banjo Charles

Benjamin Joseph George (Oliver)

Flynn Matthew (Jack, Ned)

Heath Griffin (Laella, Romney)

Hudson Leo (Willow)

Jimmy Benjamin (Madelyn, Archie)

Miles Henry Richard (Jack)

Walter Frank (Georgina, Victoria, Rosabella, Wilhelmina)

William Tasman (Oliver)

(Photo shows view of Mt Wellington across Hobart docks in autumn)

Twins Memphis Harlow and Indii Takira: Birth Announcements from Canberra (May)

15 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

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name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Mason and Jay

Memphis Harlow and Indii Takira (Noah)

 

Girls

Cate Penelope Beverley

Ella Kate Margaret

Hazel Vuokko

Isla Mary Elizabeth

Lilly Irene Patricia

Meg Michelle (Molly)

Ruby Elsie-Diane (Jackson, Lochie)

Tessa Connie

Xanthe Sabine (Astrid)

Zoe Maria Margaret

 

Boys

Bassilio Anthony

Braxton Brady

Dimitri George (Savannah)

James Reneti

Jasper Hilton (Clara, Hamish)

Lewis Ian (Charlie)

Maxwell Leonard (Emerson)

Micah Jarod (Jasmine, Kai)

Samson Brian (Evie, Enzo)

Trent Joseph

(Picture shows rowers through morning mist in sub-zero temperatures on Canberra’s Lake Burley Griffin, May 2012; photo from ABC News)

Celebrity Baby News: Jeremy and Jody Smith

14 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets, honouring

NRL player Jeremy Smith, and his wife Jody, welcomed their third child and first son on June 9; their son is named Jeremy after his dad. Jeremy Smith Junior joins big sisters Marly, aged 6, and Evie, aged 1.

Jeremy is originally from New Zealand, and is a cousin of Kalifa Faifai Loa, who plays rugby league for the North Queensland Cowboys. Jeremy has been playing professionally since 2004, and began his career with the Melbourne Storm. He has played for the Cronulla Sharks since last season, and also represented the New Zealand Kiwis in last year’s ANZAC Test.

Jody went into labour unexpectedly on the preceding Friday, giving birth to baby Jeremy in the early hours of Saturday morning. When he got home from hospital, he had two children to care for, including his baby daughter, so there was little rest for him. Despite 36 hours without sleep, Jeremy scored the first try of the game in the 17th minute, and Cronulla beat the Gold Coast Titans 22-10.

Famous Name: Venus

13 Wednesday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Famous Names

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

astronomical names, Australian Aboriginal names, Babylonian names, english names, Greek names, Latin names, locational names, mythological names, Norman-French names, Phoenician names, planet names, popular culture, Roman names, ship names, surname names

Last Wednesday was the transit of Venus, the planet taking about six and a half hours to cross the face of the Sun. Most of Australia was in a prime position to view this astronomical event (with special protective glasses, or else streamed live on the Internet so as not to damage our eyes).

Transits of Venus occur in pairs 8 years apart, separated by gaps of 121.5 years and 105.5 years. So the one before this one was in June 2004, and the next one will be in December 2117. I don’t want to be a pessimist, but if you missed this last one, I think you’ve lost your chance to see another.

The transit of Venus is not only a rare and lovely astronomical event, it is also an essential part of Australian history. It was in 1766 that the Royal Society sent Captain James Cook to observe the transit of Venus from the Pacific region. The reason scientists were so keen to get accurate observations was because astronomer Edmond Halley (of Halley’s Comet fame) had suggested that if you measured one of the transits, you could then use the data to figure out the distance from the Earth to the Sun, and thence to work out the distances to all the other bodies in the solar system.

For a variety of reasons, nearly all the scientists sent around the world ran into technical problems, and it was up to Captain Cook to take the observations, which he did in Tahiti in 1769. He then opened his sealed orders from the British Admiralty to find he had been sent on a secret mission to discover the mythical Terra Australis. There was no such place, and discovering New Zealand was a massive disappointment, as it was nowhere near the size the expedition had been hoping for.

Now some men would have gone home, feeling that observing the transit of Venus and discovering New Zealand was enough for one trip. But Captain Cook was made of sterner stuff, and he took it upon himself to become the first European to explore the east coast of Australia, and also to claim it as British territory. His reward was to be given a promotion, and sent back again to look just a bit harder for Terra Australis.

By sailing around diligently discovering places and claiming them for Britain, he was at last able to establish that Terra Australis didn’t exist, although Britain now owned a reasonable sized country it could send convicts to. The maps Cook made in the process were so good that they were still being used in the twentieth century, and the observations he took of the transit of Venus were used to calculate the distance between the Earth and the Sun with reasonable accuracy.

The planet Venus has an ancient connection to Australia as well, because the Yolngu people of Arnhem Land believe she is an important creator spirit called Banumbirr. Through dawn ceremonies performed with beautifully decorated Morning Star poles, they communicate with their dead ancestors through a rope of light which Banumbirr trails behind her. The ceremony means the ancient Yolngu people must have had enough astronomical knowledge to track the complex motion of Venus, as it rises before dawn only at certain times of the year.

I love stars, and although Venus is a planet, I, like almost everyone else, know it as both the Morning Star and the Evening Star. The brightest object in the night sky after the Moon, Venus is the first light to appear at dusk, and the last to disappear at dawn. In fact, I have often wished on Venus, with that little rhyme which begins, Star light, star bright, first star I see tonight …. Sometimes my wishes came true, sometimes they didn’t! Fickle Venus.

The Babylonians may have been the first to understand that the morning and evening stars were the same object, and called it Ishtar, after their goddess of love, sex, fertility and war. Other cultures followed the tradition, and to the Romans she was Venus; her morning aspect was called Lucifer (“light-bringer”), and her evening one Vesper.

Venus was a Roman goddess of love, beauty, sex, fertility, luck and war; her name is from the Latin word venus, meaning “sexual love, sexual desire”. The word is closely related to venenum, meaning “poison, venom”, which probably demonstrates a certain ambivalence towards passionate love we share today. The word venenum also meant charm, as in a love potion. Falling madly in love with someone can feel as if we have been given some sort of magic potion, and if it all goes wrong, we do indeed feel as awful as if we had swallowed poison instead!

The Romans said that Venus was the mother of Aeneas, the Trojan ancestor of Rome’s founder, Romulus, and therefore the mythological ancestor of the Roman people. The month of April was sacred to her, and she was associated with springtime flowering and the fecundity of nature. Her earliest festivals were ones that celebrated gardens and wine-drinking, and many of her attributes seem to be taken from more ancient goddesses of water and purity. Later on, Venus was identified with the Greek goddess Aphrodite and the Phoenician goddess Astarte.

The beauty of Venus has made her a popular subject in art, especially as it was acceptable (and practically mandatory) to show her nude or semi-nude. Two of the most famous are probably the classical statue, the Venus de Milo, which has the arms missing, and Bottichelli’s painting, The Birth of Venus. To call a woman “a Venus” means that she is beautiful and desirable in a very erotic way.

As well as being a female first name, Venus can be an English surname. It’s not related to the goddess, but is from the Norman-French place name of Venoix, near the city of Caen.

Venus is also a place name; there are two towns in Australia called Venus Bay – one in South Australia and the other in Victoria. Both these fishing villages are named after ships called Venus, which brings us to another intriguing Australian connection to Venus.

It is said that the drinking song, The Good Ship Venus, may have been influenced by actual events, when convicts travelling on the brigantine Venus mutinied and took the ship to New Zealand, becoming Australia’s first pirates. Two of the convicts were female, and there were reports of great immorality aboard ship – a possible inspiration for the song’s bawdy lyrics.

Venus is a rarely used name, but one which evokes both feminine beauty and the twinkle of a lovely “star” which can grant wishes …. sometimes. It’s one which has several connections with Australia, and is deeply woven into our nation’s history and culture. That makes Venus a surprisingly patriotic name choice, although I do feel on this one, we have waltzed far, far beyond Matilda!

(Photo of the transit of Venus from NASA)

Celebrity Baby News: Samantha Jolly and Christian Wenck

11 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names

News presenter Samantha Jolly, and her husband, Christian Wenck, welcomed their first child on May 25, and have named their son Harrison James. Harrison Wenck was born at St John of God Hospital in Subiaco.

Samantha is a reporter and presenter for Channel Seven News in Perth. Her husband Christian works in the north of Western Australia on a fly-in fly-out basis. Samantha will be taking a year’s maternity leave, and Christian has seven weeks leave.

Celebrity Baby News: Hau and Shani Lautukefu

11 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, popular culture

Music artist Hau Lautukefu, and his wife Shani, welcomed their son Aki some months ago. Aki is also the name of one of Hau’s songs. Aki Lautukefu made his stage debut when Hau brought him out briefly to show him off to the crowd at the Come Together Festival at Sydney’s Luna Park on June 9.

Hau grew up in Queanbeyan, a regional city of New South Wales near Canberra. He formed a hip-hop outfit in the early 1990s, which was eventually named Koolism. The group put out their work independently until joining a record label in 2002, when their first album on CD was released. They had gained a loyal underground following, and their fan base expanded as they began putting on successful live shows. In 2004, Koolism won an ARIA Award for Best Urban Release, and in 2007 they were featured on the documentary Words from the City, aired on ABC Television. In 2008, Koolism were signed to Mushroom Records, and Hau became host of Triple J’s Hip Hop Show.

Shani Langi Lautukefu is marketing director at Play Communication. She and Hau have been married for five years.

Less Commonly Used Boys Names

10 Sunday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Name Themes and Lists

≈ 9 Comments

Tags

Anglo-Norman names, Apache names, Australian vocabulary words, celebrity baby names, english names, fabric names, famous namesakes, fictional namesakes, germanic names, Hindi names, Indian names, Italian names, Latin names, locational names, mythological names, name data, name history, name meaning, name popularity, Native American names, nicknames, popular culture, Roman names, saints names, slang terms, surname names, unisex names, US name popularity, vocabulary names, Welsh names, Yorkshire dialect names

This follows on from Less Commonly Used Girls Names. The names are from the bottom of the popularity charts in New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and Tasmania, and in each case, the name was used less than ten times in 2011.

There seems to be a lot of musical references in this entry, so I’ve linked relevant names to YouTube videos of the person performing.

Atticus

This Roman name means “man from Attica” – Attica being the area of Greece surrounding the city of Athens. This name wasn’t uncommon in the ancient world; there is a Platonist philosopher called Atticus, and there is also a Saint Atticus, a soldier who died a martyr by being burned at the stake. However, today it is most associated with Atticus Finch, the principled lawyer and loving single father in Harper Lee’s novel, To Kill a Mockingbird. Atticus Finch, who defends a black man on a rape charge in a small Southern town during the 1930s, is considered a folk hero in legal circles. In the 1962 film adaptation, Atticus is played by Gregory Peck, who was a civil rights activist; Peck won an Academy Award for his performance, and in 2003 the American Film Institute voted his character the greatest hero in American film. It is that decent, understated heroism of Atticus Finch that makes him such a beloved character in literature and film. The character has inspired the names of both a clothing line run by musicians and an alternative rock band. It’s a hip choice which has been burning up the US popularity charts since 2004.

Bryn

Bryn is a modern Welsh name which means “hill”; as well as being a man’s name, it is also a common place name in Wales and England. A famous person with this name is Welsh opera star Bryn Terfel, a bass-baritone best known for his roles in the works of Mozart and Wagner. Apparently he applied to study music in Cardiff, but was so annoyed when they assumed he was a woman that he ended up studying in London instead. Bryn Terfel, whose first language is Welsh, is a patron of Welsh language and culture, and hopefully by now everyone in Wales recognises his name as male. Even though Bryn isn’t a common name in Australia, I don’t think it would seem too out of place either, as there are several boy’s name beginning with Br-, such as Brent and Brody. It looks rather like a cooler version of Irish Brian, which may have a similar meaning.

Corbin

Corbin is an English surname which started as a nickname based on the Anglo-Norman word for “raven”. It may have been given to someone who had raven-black hair, although less flattering possibilities also come to mind. Corbinus, the Latinised form, is found as a first name in the Domesday Book, so it has a long history of use. Despite being an old English name, this tends to be thought of as a modern American one, because it’s been solidly Top 500 in the US since the late 1980s. This may be because of television actor Corbin Bernsen, who began playing lawyer Arnold Becker on LA Law in 1986 and remained on the show until it finished in 1994. Another famous namesake is Corbin Harney, an elder and shaman of the West Shoshone people. He devoted his life to spreading a message about the dangers of nuclear energy, and the environmental issues facing the world. You may also know the name from Corbin Bleu, who was in High School Musical. This name is apparently so unusual in Australia that the article the information came from described it as a “bizarre” choice, although it seems a perfectly nice, normal name to me.

Denim

The fabric denim was originally called serge de Nîmes, after the French city where the tough cotton material was originally made by the Andre family. This was eventually shortened to denim. Denim is inextricably linked with jeans, which began life as sturdy clothing for workers, and then became fashion icons which symbolised teen rebellion. Today they are worn by pretty well everybody. Denim is an interesting name choice; it’s not really a “bad boy baby name” like Axe or Vandal, because while denim is worn by rebel icons like rock stars and bikers, it’s also worn by suburban mums and little kids. Also fabrics are usually thought of as girls names, like Velvet and Paisley, but denim is tough and hard-wearing. It’s definitely an ambiguous sort of name – one that, like the fabric, may grow with the person better than you’d expect. It’s also a soundalike with the surname and place name Denham.

Jagger

This English surname originated in Yorkshire, and means “hawker, carrier”, the word jagger being Yorkshire dialect for someone who carries a pack or load. It is claimed that most people with this surname are descended from a single family who came from Staniland, near Halifax. There was a high concentration of people named Jagger in Yorkshire, compared to the rest of England. The most famous person with this surname is undoubtedly Sir Michael “Mick” Jagger from The Rolling Stones, whose mother was born in Australia. I don’t know if this is correct, but Mick Jagger is said to be distantly related to Joseph Jagger, the 19th century British engineer famous for being “the man who broke the bank at Monte Carlo”. Joseph Jagger was indeed from Halifax in Yorkshire. The name Jagger is almost always given in relation to The Rolling Stones frontman, and may have been given a boost in 2011 from the Maroon 5 song, Moves Like Jagger, which is a tribute to Sir Mick. The number of baby boys named Jagger went from 5 to 8 in Queensland last year.

Naiche

Naiche was the last hereditary chief of the Chiricahua band of Apache Native Americans. He was an ally, protege and relative by marriage of Geronimo, the famous Apache leader and war chief. Naiche and Geronimo successfully went to war together in the 1880s, but Naiche ended up being imprisoned. Although he had resisted the process of being moved onto an “Indian Reservation”, eventually he was forced to give in, and ended his days on an Apache reservation in New Mexico. He lived only six years after moving there, and his descendants are still on the reservation. The name Naiche means “meddlesome one, mischief-maker” and it can apparently be pronounced NAY-chee, but I’m not sure if that’s the correct Apache pronunciation, or even whether it depends on which Apache accent you’re using. Naiche is for sure a very unusual name in Australia, but it has a fascinating namesake, and actually sounds slightly like Nate and Nathan. Pronunciation and spelling seem like they would be an issue.

Occy

Occy is the nickname of Australian surfer Marco “Mark” Occhilupo. Occy is short for his Italian surname, which means “eyes of the wolf”. At the same time, it is a play on the Australian word occy straps, short for octopus straps – those stretchy cords which are used by surfers to tie their surfboards onto their car’s roof rack. Mark Occhilupo was a precocious teenage surf god of the 1980s who lost his way for several years as his life spiralled out of control. In the mid-1990s, he made a comeback, and stunned everyone when he won a world title in 1999 at the age of 33. He considered retiring in 2005, but realised he still had a lot left in him. Now aged 45, he only competes part-time, but this year he made it into the final four of the Telstra Drug Aware Pro semi-finals, defeating top-ranked surfers to do so. Mark, also dubbed The Raging Bull, is an inspirational sporting icon who teaches us that mature experience can be more important than youthful talent, and that things are never over until you give up. Although Occy is a nickname and a slang term, it means so much more.

Pax

Pax is the Latin word for “peace”, and the Romans recognised a goddess of this name who symbolised peace, and was associated with the spring. The word pax also means “treaty, accord”, and the Pax Romana is the name given to the two-century period (approximately 27 BC to 180 AD) of stability and minimal military expansion in the Roman Empire. For the Romans, peace wasn’t about everyone holding hands and singing Imagine together in a field of daisies – it described that period during war when all your opponents had been thoroughly beaten and were no longer able to resist. It denoted ultimate military victory, rather than co-operation and unity. Today we see peace rather differently, and the name is probably given with the modern concept in mind rather than the ancient Roman one. In 2007, Angelina Jolie adopted a son from Vietnam and named him Pax Thien. Pax may be the name of a goddess, but this one has very much gone to the boys, as it fits so well with popular male names such as Max and Jax.

Veer

Veer is an Indian name meaning “bravest of the brave” in Hindi. Veer (“valour”) is one of the nine rasas of ancient Hindu philosophy. These emotional states are repositories of energy drawn from our life force, and by learning to master these energies, we gain emotional balance. The rasa of Veer stops us from running away from our problems, and instead face them head on; it also gives us the courage to not allow adversity to defeat us, but to get up after a fall, and continue on. It also allows us to have the healthy confidence and self-esteem needed to achieve in life. Veer Teja Ji is an Indian folk hero and saint, and the highly successful 2004 Bollywood film Veer-Zaara is about the star-crossed romance between Indian Air Force Squadron Leader, Veer Pratap Singh, and a wealthy Pakistani woman, Zaara Haayat Khan. Veer has a very positive meaning, and looks the same as the English word veer, meaning “to swerve”. It’s also a homonym of the English name Vere, so both sound and spelling are familiar to English-speakers, and it seems a very usable heritage choice.

Ziggy

Ziggy is a nickname for Germanic names such as Sigmund, but in practice is used for a variety of names starting with Z. It is famous as the name of pop star David Bowie’s alter ego, Ziggy Stardust. Bowie based the name on a London tailor’s shop called Ziggy’s that he saw from a train one day. The surname Stardust was taken from American country and western singer Norman Carol Odom, a weird novelty act billed as The Legendary Stardust Cowboy. Norman appealed to Bowie because he had a crazy band of misfits who barely understood music, and was unconsciously hilarious. The character of Ziggy was based on pioneering English rocker Vince Taylor, who modelled himself on Elvis Presley. Like so many after him, drugs proved his downfall, and he ended up believing he was the son of God, and existing solely on eggs. Bowie got to know him, and was impressed by his magnificent repertoire of dottiness. So Ziggy Stardust was a mixture of fashion, madness, outsider art, and rock and roll excess. Ziggy is also the nickname of Bob Marley’s son David, although in his case it was a drug reference. Cute name, with a solid musical background.

(Photo shows David Bowie’s final performance as Ziggy Stardust at the Hammersmith Odeon in London, 1973)

Celebrity Baby News: Tony and Erica Modra

09 Saturday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Former AFL footballer player, Tony Modra, and his wife Erica, welcomed their son Luke Anthony on January 12. Luke was born prematurely weighing just 1.29 kg (2 pounds 13 ounces), and spent some time in Flinders Medical Centre Neonatal Unit, but he is now at home with his family. Luke Modra joins big sister Hayley, aged 4.

Tony began his career in the SANFL in 1991, playing for West Adelaide, before moving to Adelaide the following year. He retired in 2001 while playing for Fremantle. Since his retirement, Tony has worked as a cattle farmer near Victor Harbor, and plays local football and cricket.

Erica (nee Jacobs) is qualified in Occupational Therapy and Exercise Science, and works in the fitness industry. She and Tony were married in 2008, after fifteen years together. Their wedding took place on the couple’s farm.

Angel and Kash: Birth Announcements from Melbourne (May)

08 Friday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Birth Announcements

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

name combinations, sibsets, twin sets

Twins

Lily and Mila

Oliver and Alexander (Thomas)

Oliver Francis and Charlie William

Penelope Kerry and Anastasia Judith (Alexander, Nicholas)

Ryan Matthew and Meagan Joy (Caitlin)

Samuel Aidan and Xavier Patrick

 

Girls

Adele Geraldine (Pippa, Bryony)

Arabella Chloe (Lucinda)

Eloise Flora (Poppy)

Emilie Katrina Claire (Eoin, Conor)

Grace Madeleine Marjorie

Healey Victoria (Darma, Rainer)

India Susan Virginia (Oscar)

Jasmine Lace (Tayla)

Katia Aikaterini (Julia, Nikita)

Kobi Jo (Tully)

Lenai Halina (Kale)

Lily May Vera

Mietta Odette (Lucas, Allegra)

Mila Corinne (Louis)

Poppy Hudson (Avalon)

Rose Elizabeth (Mitchel, Tayla, Charlie, Riley, Hayden, Callan)

Scarlett Arabella Elizabeth

Senna Rae

Tarni Jayde

Violet Florence (Charlie, Poppy, Teddy, Daisy)

 

Boys

Aidan Timothy Brennan (Thomas, Liam)

Angel Xavier Nicholas

Ari Agas (Lefteri)

Blake Michael Ray (Mason, Curtis, Raymond)

Briten Stephen (Starja, Liev)

Elijah Robert Jacob

George James Ryan

Greyson Jay

Harlan Oakley (Ava)

Henry Frederik Hugo

Indra Deva

Jack Matthew John (Abbey)

James William Robi

Jarrah David

Jesse Nathan Adrian

Kash Francis (Millie-Mae, Quinn)

Mason Aldo Elio (Juliet, Allesia)

Sam Hunter Philip

Sebastian Alf (Isabella)

Vincent Donald (Riley, Isobel)

(Photo shows Melbourne’s Fawkner Park in autumn; image from The Age)

Celebrity Baby News: Susie Maroney and Darren May

07 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by A.O. in Celebrity Baby News

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celebrity baby names, celebrity sibsets

Marathon swimmer Susie Maroney, and her estranged husband, Darren May, welcomed a son named River twelve weeks ago. River joins big sisters Paris, aged 3, and Capri, aged 19 months. Paris is the daughter of Susie’s first husband, Robert Daniels.

Susie began swimming at the 4, and began competing at the age of 7. At the age of 14, she gained her first prize for marathon swimming, coming third. The next year, she became the first person to swim from Manly to Sydney Harbour and back in seven hours. That same year, she broke the world record for swimming the English Channel. Susie retired from swimming in 2003, after a career which included winning the Manhattan Island swim race three times, becoming the first person to swim from Cuba to the United States, setting a record time while swimming from Mexico to Cuba, and swimming from Jamaica to Cuba. Only after Susie retired did she reveal that she had been born with cerebral palsy.

Darren is a furniture maker with a troubled past; he and Susie separated after 13 months of marriage while she was pregnant with River.

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